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Beyond the Rulebook
What happens when the rule book is no longer useful, or worse, was never written in the first place? In today’s fast-moving electronics landscape, we’re increasingly asked to design and build what has no precedent, no proven path, and no tidy checklist to follow. This is where “Design for Invention” begins.
March Madness
From the growing role of AI in design tools to the challenge of managing cumulative tolerances, these articles in this issue examine the technical details, design choices, and manufacturing considerations that determine whether a board works as intended.
Looking Forward to APEX EXPO 2026
I-Connect007 Magazine previews APEX EXPO 2026, covering everything from the show floor to the technical conference. For PCB designers, we move past the dreaded auto-router and spotlight AI design tools that actually matter.
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Automating the Repeatable Parts of Hardware Design
March 12, 2026 | Kyle Dumont, AllSpice.ioEstimated reading time: 2 minutes
Despite working on some of the most sophisticated technology in the world, many hardware engineers still rely on spreadsheets, tribal knowledge, and sometimes, quite literally, pen, paper, and a highlighter. Delivering new hardware products on schedule often comes down to finding a needle in a haystack disguised as a 900-page specification or datasheet.
AllSpice.io set out to automate the repeatable parts of hardware design: the well-defined, rules-based tasks that make sure nothing gets missed and everything lines up. That kind of work technology is well-suited for engineers who shine in system-level design, informed judgment, and creative problem solving. In an ideal workflow, they spend their time on the decisions that shape the product, while technology handles the rest.
AI systems have tremendous value because, rather than replacing engineering judgment, they handle first-pass review work, surfacing potential risks early and directing attention to what matters most. As one example of this approach, we’ve built DRCY, an AI-powered agent designed specifically for hardware design.
The Power of Native Data Access
A hardware-specific AI differs fundamentally from a general-purpose AI solution for design analysis.
When you export a schematic to PDF or take a screenshot for an AI chatbot, you throw away most of the information that matters. An image shows shapes and text, but it does not necessarily understand that a specific line is net VCC_3V3, that it connects to pin 7 of U4, or that U4 is a voltage regulator with specific input/output requirements. Compound that with more complex ECAD data objects—busses, multi-channel sheet hierarchy, and design rules— and you end up with an ECAD-specific logic to reason out before an agent can start analyzing design intent. That adaptor layer is where AllSpice specializes.
To continue reading this article, which originally appeared in the February 2026 edition of I-Connect007 Magazine, click here.
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Brent Fischthal - Koh YoungSuggested Items
New Book Explores How UV Technology Is Transforming Electronics Protection, Efficiency, and Sustainability
05/14/2026 | I-Connect007I-Connect007 proudly announces the recent release of The Printed Circuit Designer’s Guide to…™ UV Curable Conformal Coatings. Authored by respected industry technologists Brian Chislea and Cody Schoener, PhD, of Dow, Inc., this new volume offers a comprehensive exploration of UV-curable conformal coatings and their expanding role in improving the protection, performance, and sustainability of electronic assemblies.
Siemens Expands EDA Software Access Through EuroCDP Project
05/14/2026 | SiemensSiemens has become the first software provider to sign a strategic framework agreement with the European Chips Joint Undertaking (Chips JU) which aims to bolster Europe's semiconductor industry by fostering collaboration between the EU, member states and the private sector, through the European Chips Design Platform (EuroCDP) project.
Rethinking Stackup, Materials, and Tolerances in Modern Designs
05/14/2026 | Kristin Moyer, Global Electronics AssociationThe simple rectangular rigid PCB is becoming increasingly infrequent. This reality necessitates designing with concepts well outside traditional rigid PCB methodologies. For example, the designer of wearable electronics may need to implement conductive fibers integrated into the textile material. Heads-up displays, like those in VR/AR headsets and glasses, require transparent circuitry etched into the display glass. The process of designing without a rule book usually starts with something other than the traditional board design process.
New Courses: Advance Your Electronics Expertise in June and July
05/14/2026 | Global Electronics AssociationStay current with design, manufacturing, and quality standards by enrolling in one of these online instructor-led courses starting in June and July from ElectronicsU at the Global Electronics Association, designed to help professionals at every level sharpen their skills and advance their careers. These live, expert-led sessions combine flexibility with real-time interaction, allowing participants to learn directly from seasoned industry professionals while collaborating with peers worldwide. Access to all applicable IPC standards is included in the courses.
Road to Reliability: Engineering High Uptime EV Charging Infrastructure
05/13/2026 | Stanton Rak, SF Rak CompanyThe transition to EVs is no longer constrained solely by vehicle capability. Instead, it is increasingly defined by a simpler, but more unforgiving question: Will the charger work when I arrive? This high uptime does not happen by accident. As EV technology has matured, limitations in battery range, power electronics, and thermal management are no longer the primary barriers to adoption.